Occupation Miller Role Author | Name Henning Andersen Religion Church of Denmark | |
![]() | ||
Full Name Henning Andersen Born 16 July 1917 ( 1917-07-16 ) Linde Books Active Arithmetic!: Movement and Mathematics Teaching in the Lower Grades of a Waldorf School Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada | ||
Education Harvard University (1966) |
Henning Andersen (16 July 1917 – 29 June 1944) was a member of the Danish resistance executed by the German occupying power.
Contents
Biography
Andersen was born in Linde on 16 July 1917 to coach builder Martin Andersen and 28-year-old wife Emilie Kirstine née Larsen and baptized in Linde church on the 19th Sunday after Trinity the same year.
In addition to being a member of the Hvidsten group Andersen was also a miller.
The group helped the British Special Operations Executive parachute weapons and supplies into Denmark for distribution to the resistance.
In March 1944 the Gestapo made an "incredible number of arrests" including in the region of Randers where a number of members of the Hvidsten group were arrested.
The following month De frie Danske reported that several arrestees from Hvidsten had been transferred from Randers to Vestre Fængsel.
On 29 June 1944 Andersen and seven other members of the Hvidsten group were executed in Ryvangen.
After his death
On 15 July 1944 De frie Danske reported on the execution of several members of the Hvidsten group. Six months later the January 1945 issue of the resistance newspaper Frit Danmark (Free Denmark) reported that on 29 June the previous year Andersen and seven other named members of the Hvidsten group had been executed.
On 5 July 1945 Andersen's remains and those of five others from the group were found in Ryvangen and transferred to the Department of Forensic Medicine of the university of Copenhagen. The remains of the two remaining executed members of the group, Marius Fiil and his son Niels had been found in the same area three days before.
Alternatively, his remains were recovered on or before 3 July because on that day an inquest in the Department of Forensic Medicine of the university of Copenhagen showed that he was executed with gunshot wounds to the chest.
On 10 July he was together with the seven other executed group members cremated at Bispebjerg Cemetery.
In 1945 a memorial stone over the eight executed members of the Hvidsten group was raised near Hvidsten kro.
Similarly a larger memorial stone for resistance members including the eight executed members of the Hvidsten group has been laid down in Ryvangen Memorial Park.